The 1960s and 1970s were a time of big social change in the United States. One major movement involved farmworkers, many of whom were Mexican or Filipino immigrants. They fought for increased pay, human living and working conditions, and dignity for farmworkers through unionizing, strikes and other collective action.
“Justice in the Fields: Immigration and the Labor Movement of the 1960s and 1970s” is a free resource bundle from The Immigrant Learning Center. It features classroom-ready activities, primary sources and lesson plans. It’s a great way to introduce the factors that led to the movement, the figures that led the way and how it’s reflected in our current immigration policy into an existing civil rights or labor unions unit. It would also fit well into a broader overview of U.S. immigration across history.
For more free tools to teach immigration in your existing curriculum, explore our Teaching U.S. Immigration Lesson Plans and Resources page. For more guidance on immigrant stories and storytelling, check out our Immigrant Stories Resource Hub or our on-demand training, Elevating Immigrant Stories: From Storytime to U.S. History.
This resource bundle is sponsored in part by the Library of Congress Teaching with Primary Sources Eastern Region Program, coordinated by Waynesburg University.